Money for nothing - Atrophy correlates of gambling decision making in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
Money for nothing - Atrophy correlates of gambling decision making in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
Neurodegenerative patients show often severe everyday decision making problems. Currently it is however not clear which brain atrophy regions are implicated in such decision making problems. We investigated the atrophy correlates of gambling decision making in a sample of 63 participants, including two neurodegenerative conditions (behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia — bvFTD; Alzheimer's disease — AD) as well as healthy age-matched controls. All participants were tested on the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) and the behavioural IGT results were covaried against the T1 MRI scans of all participants to identify brain atrophy regions implicated in gambling decision making deficits. Our results showed a large variability in IGT performance for all groups with both patient groups performing especially poor on the task. Importantly, bvFTD and AD groups did not differ significantly on the behavioural performance of the IGT. However, by contrast, the atrophy gambling decision making correlates differed between bvFTD and AD, with bvFTD showing more frontal atrophy and AD showing more parietal and temporal atrophy being implicated in decision making deficits, indicating that both patient groups fail the task on different levels. Frontal (frontopolar, anterior cingulate) and parietal (retrosplenial) cortex atrophy covaried with poor performance on the IGT. Taken together, the atrophy correlates of gambling decision making show that such deficits can occur due to a failure of different neural structures, which will inform future diagnostics and treatment options to alleviate these severe everyday problems in neurodegenerative patients.
263-272
Kloeters, Silvie
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Bertoux, Maxime
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O'Callaghan, Claire
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Hodges, John R
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Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
2013
Kloeters, Silvie
8e0dfae9-c4b3-4879-be09-4ee59da99f0a
Bertoux, Maxime
cd351b78-c9bc-4d36-9a29-cc365fe16c34
O'Callaghan, Claire
536605c1-825e-43a5-952e-821973707751
Hodges, John R
7e7a95ab-a65f-42a1-8c01-30917e6b2f3d
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Kloeters, Silvie, Bertoux, Maxime, O'Callaghan, Claire, Hodges, John R and Hornberger, Michael
(2013)
Money for nothing - Atrophy correlates of gambling decision making in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease.
NeuroImage: Clinical, 2, .
(doi:10.1016/j.nicl.2013.01.011).
Abstract
Neurodegenerative patients show often severe everyday decision making problems. Currently it is however not clear which brain atrophy regions are implicated in such decision making problems. We investigated the atrophy correlates of gambling decision making in a sample of 63 participants, including two neurodegenerative conditions (behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia — bvFTD; Alzheimer's disease — AD) as well as healthy age-matched controls. All participants were tested on the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) and the behavioural IGT results were covaried against the T1 MRI scans of all participants to identify brain atrophy regions implicated in gambling decision making deficits. Our results showed a large variability in IGT performance for all groups with both patient groups performing especially poor on the task. Importantly, bvFTD and AD groups did not differ significantly on the behavioural performance of the IGT. However, by contrast, the atrophy gambling decision making correlates differed between bvFTD and AD, with bvFTD showing more frontal atrophy and AD showing more parietal and temporal atrophy being implicated in decision making deficits, indicating that both patient groups fail the task on different levels. Frontal (frontopolar, anterior cingulate) and parietal (retrosplenial) cortex atrophy covaried with poor performance on the IGT. Taken together, the atrophy correlates of gambling decision making show that such deficits can occur due to a failure of different neural structures, which will inform future diagnostics and treatment options to alleviate these severe everyday problems in neurodegenerative patients.
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Published date: 2013
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Local EPrints ID: 505010
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505010
PURE UUID: 4c292ed0-d773-43e2-a9e4-69abdd9d59c6
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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2025 17:12
Last modified: 24 Sep 2025 02:18
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Author:
Silvie Kloeters
Author:
Maxime Bertoux
Author:
Claire O'Callaghan
Author:
John R Hodges
Author:
Michael Hornberger
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